No it's an adjective.
The verb form is differ.
yes
no
They are different in exactly the same way the he and him are different. "Who" is the subject of a verb. "Whom" is the object of a verb or preposition. For example: The man who (subject), we suspect, committed the crime, is (verb) here. Compared to : The man whom (object) we suspect(verb) of committing the crime is here.
They are different forms of the verb "to be" in the present simple tense: I am a techer. They are doctors. The verb to be most frequently works in conjunction with another verb: I am writing a letter. We are playing in the garden.These are the different forms of the verb to be for the different persons:I am, You are, He/she/it is, we are, you are, they are.
The noun form of the adjective 'different' is differentness.A related noun form is difference.
An action verb is something the noun in the sentence is doing. It helps asking "can something do this?" to figure out if it is an action verb or a linking verb. A linking verb is something that you cannot do. For example, something cannot 'is'. However, is is a verb. To be exact, it is a linking verb.
A verb is an action, such as: run, hop, is (he IS over there), thought. They have different different tenses (when they happen). Example: Ran is the "past"-tense for run.
The verb in the sentence "How are they different" is "are."
The verb form for different is differentiate.
No, were is not the verb is, is the verb.
"Different" is an adjective, not a verb or a preposition. It is used to describe how two or more things are not alike or are distinct from each other.
i think it is adverbs and verb
The word "different" is neither a verb nor an adverb.The word "different" is an adjective.The verb form of the word is "differ" or "differing"The adverb form of the word is "differently".
Ebbing is already a verb. There are different ways to use it, but it is already a verb.
Extending is a verb; if you can do it, it's a verb. A different tense of extending is extended.
"Become" is a linking verb when it is used to connect the subject of a sentence with a subject complement that describes or renames it. It is not an action verb like "run" or "eat," which show physical actions.
Differ is a verb and different is an adjective.
They are different in exactly the same way the he and him are different. "Who" is the subject of a verb. "Whom" is the object of a verb or preposition. For example: The man who (subject), we suspect, committed the crime, is (verb) here. Compared to : The man whom (object) we suspect(verb) of committing the crime is here.
They are different forms of the verb "to be" in the present simple tense: I am a techer. They are doctors. The verb to be most frequently works in conjunction with another verb: I am writing a letter. We are playing in the garden.These are the different forms of the verb to be for the different persons:I am, You are, He/she/it is, we are, you are, they are.